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#506679 - 10/01/22 11:24 PM
Re: The best Arranger Keyboard for this generation?
[Re: DannyUK]
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Member
Registered: 06/06/10
Posts: 793
Loc: Hellas, Creta, Iraklion
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Hello. Why do you say that? Do you have some experience with this type of arranger? I have Yamaha Genos, Ketron Audya, SD9, Korg Pa3x as well I also had for a month the Pa5x which was provided to me by a well-known music store in order to test it in order to give an exposure to the store's salespeople. In fact, I had also made a video (with Pa5x) which I am attaching to you but it is in the Greek language because it was addressed there and that is the reason I did not have it public but as (unregistered). Take a look at it if you want. https://youtu.be/oke6zdkrbZE?t=41So I think I know very well the pros and cons of all of them. Therefore my question to you is if you have ever had experience with these types of instruments to have this opinion (about a fake) which of course I absolutely respect although I don't agree. Also I would like you to tell me what exactly you mean by (cheating). I would like your answer to this and then I will give you my opinion if you want.
Edited by Sokratis 1974 (10/02/22 03:54 AM)
_________________________
Style Producer Ketron Event, Ketron Audya 76, Audya 5, SD9, SD1,Yamaha Genos, Korg Pa3x, microarranger, Roland Fantom G6, V-Synth XT, XV-5080, SH201, D-50, Novation KS4, Dave Smith Evolver
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#506681 - 10/02/22 08:11 AM
Re: The best Arranger Keyboard for this generation?
[Re: DannyUK]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14277
Loc: NW Florida
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I think the PA5X is still in beta. There’s a lot to like about the feature set, but it seems that the OS is very much a work in progress, quite a bit of the functionality has yet to be added (SMF to style MIA, no multi footswitch yet, all kinds of issues with the two styles at a time, legacy data migration is iffy etc. etc.). How long it takes Korg to squash all the bugs is anyone’s guess, there’s a big OS update promised for later this year, but how many missing features get added back and how many existing features get fixed is unknown atm…
But yes, there’s pretty much universal agreement the new effects and whatever Korg did with the D/A converters has resulted in a big improvement in the openness of the sound. I am still undecided on the loop sync stuff until I’ve heard some real world comparisons to computer loop software. While tempo and pitch manipulation of audio has been a thing on arrangers for a decade or so, my experience on Roland at least exposes that live tempo and pitch manipulation is quite noticeably inferior to computer tools doing the same thing. If I need an audio track transposed or sped up/slowed down, I tend to do it in the computer in advance. We really need a shootout to compare these tools that exposes the artifacts to see who’s got the best algorithms or the best CPU overhead to handle this demanding task.
You have to understand that Sokratis seems quite heavily emotionally invested in the audio loop arranger concept, and if you like EXACTLY what it does and play ONLY what it does well, it’s very effective. No argument there. The problem as always is, if you ALMOST like what it does, you have zero ability to fix it. You can’t change the snare sound in a loop. You can’t change an acoustic guitar loop into an electric one. You can’t edit the rhythm to better fit a particular song, you can’t have the percussionist stop playing the cowbell.
The style is what the style is, and always will be. You will have to adjust to it, not the other way round. Now, don’t get me wrong, that’s how an awful lot of players approach the arranger. Turn it on, play some basic chords, happily accept whatever it does. If that’s fine for you, you’re good to go. But, as I have said on other threads, it’s a dead end. Be honest… how many of us have the skills to record our own loops? Played flawlessly, recorded impeccably, matched carefully to all the others? Virtually nobody…
But all of us are capable of going into a style editor and muting the cowbell (if we want to!) or changing a sticks kit to a brushes kit, an electric guitar part to an acoustic one, or change the amp type on a rock guitar part. Easy peazy.
There’s already enough criticism of arrangers that they make us all sound alike, well, audio loop arrangers take that to a whole new level. And the worst aspect of that is, traditional MIDI arrangers are getting closer and closer to audio loops with features like round Robin drums, Guitar modes, and high quality amp simulators for rock guitar parts (put a clean guitar into an amp sim, you have a very convincing rock guitar that breaks up variably depending on the chord, just like real ones do) and all of those things remain completely adjustable, unlike a loop.
I guess it all boils down to what kind of player you are. If you like to switch on the keyboard and play along with whatever the arranger does, loops give you a shortcut to a very impressive sound. But just the one. If you like to get under the hood and tweak something to fit YOU, they have issues.
But to go back to the OP, sorry. The PA5x in its current form is no more the ‘best’ arranger than any other. They are all good at some things, bad at others. There’s a laundry list of Genos features the PA5x doesn’t have (far more effects that can be stacked, Ensemble Mode, that awesome chord sequencer to name a few) and doubtless the new Ketron has stuff apart from the audio loops that the PA5x is missing.
This whole ‘my arranger is the best’ has always boiled down to ‘my arranger is best for ME’ and always will. We get this same BS every release cycle, maybe we’re better served accepting that each of them has flaws, and try to point them out and the possible fix for them.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#506686 - 10/02/22 09:33 AM
Re: The best Arranger Keyboard for this generation?
[Re: DannyUK]
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Member
Registered: 06/06/10
Posts: 793
Loc: Hellas, Creta, Iraklion
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Dear Diki. I'm not trying to prove anything and I'm not the one who started this discussion. But yes, I never hid my love for Audio Styles. But fortunately or unfortunately, I have too much experience in both worlds to judge according to my own tastes. In this case I'm just asking politely how is our friend here to this conclusion about (cheating and fake).
_________________________
Style Producer Ketron Event, Ketron Audya 76, Audya 5, SD9, SD1,Yamaha Genos, Korg Pa3x, microarranger, Roland Fantom G6, V-Synth XT, XV-5080, SH201, D-50, Novation KS4, Dave Smith Evolver
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#506699 - 10/04/22 12:02 PM
Re: The best Arranger Keyboard for this generation?
[Re: DannyUK]
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Moderator
Registered: 03/21/01
Posts: 3602
Loc: Middletown, DE
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Hello forum,
I haven’t posted in like forever here but i do check in from time to time. I hope all peoples are ok,
Unfortunately I am really tired so I’m not going to say a lot now.
But in my opinion, I think Korg is currently the best in the world and leading in arranger keyboards and I can’t see that changing at the moment. There’s no cheating, purely midi, 💯 editable, no audio bull****, just pure raw sounds that a user has ownership of in its entirety.
I hate where the arranger industry is heading, false & fake audio that even my toe can sound good in using. Such a shame.
Chord playing does not sound right using styles with audio elements & there’s nothing you can do about it.
Would like to hear more opinions of this.
All the best & take care, Danny Danny. I am not sure if there is any arranger out there that is purely "AUDIO BASED" which would have the limitations of AUDIO you are alluding to. However for KETRON, realizing that AUDIO still does have it's limitations, we gave you the best of both worlds - AUDIO - with it's pros and cons, and MIDI - with it's pros and cons. It is up to you the end user to maximize on both technologies in 1 product. You would however have to personally experience playing an Arranger Workstation with these Audio capabilities first before you can draw such a conclusion, and if you have, I would like to echo Sokratis 1974's questions too. You already have experience working with a great Midibased Arranger (KORG). Have you had equal hours on an AUDIO & Midi based arranger? What were your thoughts then (if yes)?
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#506705 - 10/05/22 02:29 AM
Re: The best Arranger Keyboard for this generation?
[Re: DannyUK]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/09/99
Posts: 1130
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Hello all, thank you for your replies.
OK, I may have been a bit harsh in my initial post, so I have edited a couple of things out, I was really tired at the time of writing and probably should have waited to post it.
I think what I trying to elude to was a concern I have where some manufactures feel they may really improve on the sounds by way of audio because maybe they feel they've reached the limit with midi? This is where I think editing becomes less flexible and you're stuck with a certain sound. Where I said cheating/fake (which I have since edited out because I think I was a little harsh), my reasoning here was that using anything audio seems to take away the skill of being a bit more creative. I always like to give an example of when playing along with an MP3 or a Midi File, I hate using MP3's because for the same reason I don't believe there's much creativity using an MP3 whereas at least with a Midi file you can edit it until your hearts content, putting your own stamp on it to make a certain song sound almost completely different. The counter argument here then is that it doesn't sound like the original anymore and MP3's/Audio are the real thing, but that's exactly why I don't like using them. Not many have agreed or even understood my reasoning on this so that's why I don't tend bring it up anymore in any face to face discussion I have with friends/family about it.
I really like Ketron and I still own my SD60 (it's never going anywhere) and I really enjoy how the drums sound, but sometimes not so much the guitars, especially the audio guitars because sometimes they don't sound correct to my ears and can a little sound off especially if you want change key. When I edit a style to change the guitar to another live guitar it can make it worse so sometimes I either take them off completely or replace with a midi guitar sound if it's able to play it. Maybe I am doing something wrong but I seem to get better results when not using audio sounds. I am not talking about the drums though because I have no problem in audio drums and they do sound amazing on the SD60.
I had a similar issue on my old GEM WK8 as well when using RASS I was getting very mixed results whenever audio parts were used, I know it's a much older keyboard but I could sense that using audio could have it's drawbacks even from back then.
I didn't want to sound negative and it's great we are still getting new arrangers but I'm just not sure about the audio route.
Edited by DannyUK (10/05/22 02:33 AM)
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#506706 - 10/05/22 02:39 AM
Re: The best Arranger Keyboard for this generation?
[Re: DannyUK]
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Member
Registered: 06/06/10
Posts: 793
Loc: Hellas, Creta, Iraklion
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Hello all, thank you for your replies.
OK, I may have been a bit harsh in my initial post, so I have edited a couple of things out, I was really tired at the time of writing and probably should have waited to post it.
I think what I trying to elude to was a concern I have where some manufactures feel they may really improve on the sounds by way of audio because maybe they feel they've reached the limit with midi? This is where I think editing becomes less flexible and you're stuck with a certain sound. Where I said cheating/fake (which I have since edited out because I think I was a little harsh), my reasoning here was that using anything audio seems to take away the skill of being a bit more creative. I always like to give an example of when playing along with an MP3 or a Midi File, I hate using MP3's because for the same reason I don't believe there's much creativity using an MP3 whereas at least with a Midi file you can edit it until your hearts content, putting your own stamp on it to make a certain song sound almost completely different. The counter argument here then is that it doesn't sound like the original anymore and MP3's/Audio are the real thing, but that's exactly why I don't like using them. Not many have agreed or even understood my reasoning on this so that's why I don't tend bring it up anymore in any face to face discussion I have with friends/family about it.
I really like Ketron and I still own my SD60 (it's never going anywhere) and I really enjoy how the drums sound, but sometimes not so much the guitars, especially the audio guitars because sometimes they don't sound correct to my ears and can a little sound off especially if you want change key. When I edit a style to change the guitar to another live guitar it can make it worse so sometimes I either take them off completely or replace with a midi guitar sound if it's able to play it. Maybe I am doing something wrong but I seem to get better results when not using audio sounds. I am not talking about the drums though because I have no problem in audio drums and they do sound amazing on the SD60.
I had a similar issue on my old GEM WK8 as well when using RASS I was getting very mixed results whenever audio parts were used, I know it's a much older keyboard but I could sense that using audio could have it's drawbacks even from back then.
I didn't want to sound negative and it's great we are still getting new arrangers but I'm just not sure about the audio route. Hi DannyUK You spoke honestly and honestly and I admire that. So I will give my opinion on this matter at some point. Thanks for your reply.
_________________________
Style Producer Ketron Event, Ketron Audya 76, Audya 5, SD9, SD1,Yamaha Genos, Korg Pa3x, microarranger, Roland Fantom G6, V-Synth XT, XV-5080, SH201, D-50, Novation KS4, Dave Smith Evolver
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